How can people NOT be ecopsychologically "fukked up" across the board in U.S. society, when they
are all fukking the Earth, albeit often obliviously? They generally think they are
"above" nature and that technology will save them (see Separation from
nature impossible  Culture Change Letter, #66).

One must become disturbed by living almost entirely in an indoor, artificial
environment where nature is devalued and modern industrial values are taken on
as the only valid, common religion. Instead of living more outdoors, or
fighting to save wilderness, a safe alternative is to find solace in yoga,
meditation, hobbies, etc.

Let the crash in energy production/consumption reveal how sane we pretend to
be. The results will be very disappointing, as intelligent folk "of
all walks of (U.S.) life" are undone by simple biological, geological and
economic reality. Oil extraction is peaking globally, and the shortfall of this
resource sine qua non will trigger economic paralysis because of lack of
preparation for sustainable living. The reactions people have will be
desperate, violent, irrational and cruel  compared to this calm before the
storm.

Mass graves

If the above factors not show us to be dangerously out-of-touch with
reality, as we wait
for the resource-greedy house of cards to fall while planning no alternative way
of living, then one wants to believe in our innocence and excellence all the way
to the proverbial mass graves.

Deforestation, disappearing reserves of clean, fresh water, climate change and
toxification of the environment are crimes against life and every one of us, but
also indicate a pathological denial of responsibility not limited to the fat-cat
subset of the U.S. population.

Who isn't insane these days, as the merry-go-round spins so fast that many of us
fly off onto the pavement to be disabled or neutralized? Yet, those who
hang on to the
accelerating merry-go-round are desensitized to the growing disaster all around
as well as to their own dehumanization.

"Where is my mind" (- The Pixies, in Fight Club)

The "average (U.S.) American" suffers from an array of mental
afflictions that could also be ascribed to a spiritual crisis. In coping
with alienation, separateness, and lack of meaning in an economic system
geared toward producing goods to throw away, people are of course
disturbed. Some have chemical imbalances that seem to require immediate
intervention with drugs and incarceration, while others are just walking around
in a Prozac haze. Most of us are also under the influence of environmental
exposures affecting our minds (as mentioned in Part One of this two-part
exploration).

The field of ecopsychology has gained interest in some U.S. colleges to help
explain the reasons our fast-disappearing Garden of Eden is being trashed.
This new discipline helps us understand the effects the Earth's destruction has on our troubled
minds. Although the condition of the patient (the typical modern consumer)
is dire, perhaps solutions are not that complicated. We must live more natural
lives, or start trying. Part of that is to love more: love the Earth and
each other, giving and receiving. One ecopsychology instructor, Lorin
Lindner, Ph.D., in her decades of clinical work and activism to protect animals,
concludes that "the biggest problem people have is that they need
love."

One of the pressures on modern people to either knuckle down to society's
coercion and/or go insane is that pointing out the truth is unwelcome 
looking squarely at the truth is
not an option, apparently, for around 99% of people seeming to be sleepwalking
off the ecological cliff. Venturing into the consequences of
truth-telling would be most illuminating if one were to (1.) remind the Christian White House "Thou
shalt not kill." (Sure!) (2.) Try to have the heads of churches tell the
war makers they are sinners. As we sense rising destruction of both nature
and the unraveling social fabric, denial works for many of us, while
others opt for getting richer and insulating themselves from "the outside
world" (much as an ostrich hides its head in the sand).

Supporting the truth, by helping each other raise our voices, say, to
cut fossil fuel use or protest the killing of Arabs for "freedom," is
sadly not a valid, accepted occupation  just try to make a living at it! There is practically zero money to be
made in truth telling, unless one is careful not to stray outside the boundaries
of society's limits. Those pointing out real problems, or offering
alternative economics and more equal social structure, are mostly unwelcome and
are "in the way." Faced with this attitude from those who
control the food supply and every other measure of mainstream social success, it
is no wonder even people who think deeply, sensitively and clearly are stressed
and somewhat disturbed too.

Instability Enters

"My name is called Disturbance" - The Rolling Stones, in
their song Street Fighting Man, 1969, recounted insane and frustrated modern youth.
Rather than just be disturbed inside, youth in the 1960s decided to take some
control over their lives by taking pride in being a disturbance, which is
what they were being accused of anyway. Many of these youth had
constructive disturbance on their mind, and after many skirmishes in the streets
with the police this became largely a movement of self improvement: the result
was The Me Generation. This was an admission of both inner disturbance and
disaffection with mainstream society and its false values.

However, The Me Generation in the U.S. failed to do much more than
bring us Jimmy Carter and allow Ronald Reagan and Bush the First to seize
power. Now in 2004 the stage is set for a rebellion against the extreme
wing of the Establishment, and in the streets the setting is the Republican National Convention
in New York this summer (see bottom for info).

Back to the bigger picture: Violence tracks insanity and social upheaval which have barely begun. With
the corporate press doing its duty to cloud issues in order to hold up the
status quo, it is no wonder a major issue is neglected and
suppressed: land reform. It is nowhere in common social discourse in
the U.S. today  so far, during our petroleum haze. When people are
displaced from land, even after several generations, they eventually react with
rage or confusion when their survival is compromised. Sometimes a reaction
is in association with a movement or an organization, or it can be spontaneous
and sporadic. Some people would claim agitators and anarchists are of the
most disturbed in or out of society, while others would laud them as notably
reasonable for their strong reaction to injustice and ecocide.

The more one is alienated from nature and the human family, the more
unstable one can become. However, this is not completely negative:

Instability that may be an awakening is a healthy consequence of the tyranny
of the increasingly weird, greed-oriented status quo. On its face, the
idea of a person being fukked up is not a healthy development, but if the effect
is to become positive and destabilize enough of the socioeconomic pyramid, by
simply fostering natural systems, mutual aid and self reliance, a dominant
society is overturned and reconfigured. Heroic history or defense of the
downtrodden is made by the disturbed and the wild, and not so much by the tamed and their masters.

Guilt and paranoia thanks to US policies' backlash

Being ecospychologically disturbed is only worsened by
frustration over one's leaders' moral bankruptcy that, in the case of the U.S.,
hurts people not just domestically but abroad. For example, warming the
globe while refusing to ratify the Kyoto Protocol is viewed as criminal
internationally. Another example concerns decades of direct consequences
and backlash: On Sept. 11, 2001 we may have witnessed some
terroristic revenge. One and a half million Iraqis  Muslims  had
died from U.N. sanctions that Clinton's Secretary of State said was "worth
it."

The element of terror, both state and unofficial, whether out of
control or used to achieve other ends such as oil access and reelection, causes
paranoia or hatred amongst unaware citizens. The government's purposes or
its honest reaction can include even the postponement of U.S. elections, as
revealed in mid July in Washington. Fear and violence certainly add
to our already ecopsychologically disturbed state. In a headline from the Associated Press on July
13, 2004, we are reminded of today's lessening of security for our homeland:
"CIA Official: Iraq War Helping al-Qaida". But to go further to
understand the rage of foreigners, the U.S. population has to face the fact that
approximately 6 million civilians
around the world have been killed by the U.S. military, the CIA and
"defense" industries after World War
II. "Huh?" says the innocent, educated American who would not
believe him/herself to be fukked up or even fukked over.

Jan Lundberg's columns are protected by
copyright; however, non-commercial use of the material is permitted as long as
full attribution is given with a link to this website, and he is informed of the
re-publishing: info@culturechange.org